Pakistan cenbank opens formal banking to licensed virtual asset service providers

A logo of the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) is pictured on a reception desk at the head office in Karachi, Pakistan, on July 16, 2019. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 15 April 2026
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Pakistan cenbank opens formal banking to licensed virtual asset service providers

  • Move follows 2026 virtual assets law, marks first step to bring crypto into regulated system
  • Banks barred from holding or investing in digital assets, must ensure strict compliance checks

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s central bank has allowed banks to open accounts for licensed virtual asset service providers, overriding ​a 2018 ban, a circular from the central bank and statement by the virtual asset regulator said, as the country moves to integrate digital assets into the regulated financial system.

The move follows the enactment of the Virtual Assets Act, 2026, and ‌marks Pakistan’s ‌first formal step toward ​bringing crypto-related ‌businesses ⁠into ​the banking ⁠system under strict anti-money-laundering and compliance rules.

“This is a foundational step in bringing virtual assets into the formal financial system of Pakistan,” Bilal bin Saqib, the Chairman of the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority said ⁠in the statement on Wednesday.

Banks must ‌verify licenses issued ‌by the newly established Pakistan ​Virtual Assets Regulatory ‌Authority before onboarding firms and maintain segregated, non-interest-bearing ‌client accounts in rupees, the State Bank of Pakistan said.

Banks will remain responsible for due diligence, risk profiling and reporting suspicious transactions, the ‌central bank said, adding that lenders cannot invest in or hold virtual assets ⁠using ⁠their own or customer funds.

Pakistan has already moved to bring in global crypto players, signing a memorandum of understanding with Binance in December to explore tokenizing up to $2 billion in assets and granting initial clearances to Binance and HTX to begin licensing.

It also struck a deal with an affiliate of World Liberty Financial in January ​to explore stablecoin-based, ​cross-border payments.